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  1. Johann II, Duke of Saxe-Weimar ( Johann Maria Wilhelm; 22 May 1570 – 18 July 1605) was a Duke of Saxe-Weimar and Jena . Biography. Johann was the second son of Johann Wilhelm, Duke of Saxe-Weimar and Dorothea Susanne of Simmern . Johann Wilhelm died in 1573 when his son was only three years old.

  2. Juan Ernesto II de Sajonia-Weimar ( Weimar, 11 de septiembre de 1627- ibidem, 15 de mayo de 1683) fue un duque de Sajonia-Weimar. Biografía. Era el segundo hijo, aunque el mayor de los hijos supervivientes, del duque Guillermo de Sajonia-Weimar y de Leonor Dorotea de Anhalt-Dessau .

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Saxe-WeimarSaxe-Weimar - Wikipedia

    • Division of Leipzig
    • Division of Erfurt
    • Thirty Years' War
    • Weimar Classicism

    In the late 15th century much of what is now Thuringia, including the area around Weimar, was held by the Wettin Electors of Saxony. According to the 1485 Treaty of Leipzig, the Wettin lands had been divided between Elector Ernest of Saxony and his younger brother Albert III, with the western lands in Thuringia together with the electoral dignitygo...

    John Frederick II was succeeded by his younger brother John William at Weimar, who in a short time also fell out of favour with the emperor by his alliance with King Charles IX of France. In 1572 Maximilian II enforced the Division of Erfurt, whereby the Ernestine lands were divided among Duke John William and the two surviving sons of imprisoned J...

    At the outbreak of the Thirty Years' War, Duke Johann Ernst I supported the Protestant Bohemian estates under the "Winter King" Frederick V of the Palatinate, who were defeated at the 1620 Battle of White Mountain. Stripped of his title by Emperor Ferdinand II, he remained a fierce opponent of the Catholic Habsburg dynasty and died on Ernst von Man...

    Upon the death of John George's descendant Wilhelm Heinrich in 1741, Duke Ernest Augustus I of Saxe-Weimar also inherited the Duchy of Saxe-Eisenach. He then ruled both duchies in personal union and decisively forwarded the development of his estates by the implementation of the primogenitureprinciple. His son Ernest Augustus II, who succeeded him ...

  4. John Frederick III of Gotha died unmarried and heirless in 1565 and John William of Weimar tried to claim Saxe-Gotha, but the sons of the imprisoned John Frederick II entered their own claim. In 1572 the claimants agreed to the Division of Erfurt.